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> Plan of the River Delaware from Chester to Philadelphia with the situation of His Majesty's Ships on the 15th Novr. 1777

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Plan of the River Delaware from Chester to Philadelphia with the situation of His Majesty's Ships on the 15th Novr. 1777

This beautiful, never seen before, hand-drawn map is an original plan from which Des Barres later published his famous and important account of the battle for Philidelphia in 1777

Chart Information

Reference:

A309

Date

1777

Hydrographer/Surveyor/Artist:

John Hunter

Size Of Original:

w 17" x h 41.5"

Paper Type

Innova Smooth Cotton 315gsm

Further Information

This print is
available framed at Half (A309x) size. Framed delivery to USA & Canada only.

Chart ID

Size

Dimensions

Print Only

Framed

Notes

A309

Original

w17" x h41.5

$175

N/A

Print only

A309x

Half

w12" x h29"

$86

$304

1.5" frame

Frames
available in either black or brown wood with UV protective acrylic glazing. Please go to the drop down menu to
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Read the full Chart History here:

This is the original, and never before published, plan of the River Delaware drawn Lieutenant John Hunter and presented in his own hand. The plan shows the position of British and American defences and the King's ships, as of the 15th November 1777. This plan was later taken by J.F.W. Des Barres for inclusion in the second edition of the Atlantic Neptune Atlas (1780, vol 4), as the upper section of his split-plan for the navigation of the river (see Heritage Charts A305). This beautiful plan shows the river from Chester up to Philadelphia.

The detail presented here by Hunter is simply astonishing. He made the survey in November 1777 just after the British had occupied Philadelphia. This section of the river was of great significance to both the Americans and the British as it gets closer to Philadelphia, which was then the largest city in America and, temporarily, the fledgling nation's Capital.

Hunter's plan clearly shows the navigable course for ships travelling up the river, through the maze of defences prepared by the Americans. The location of the Chevaux de Frizes' (sunken sharpened stakes with metal tips) which were designed to force ships under the guns of the adjacent forts was of course carefully plotted. Hunter uses a red line to point the way and the key to the map instructs ships to keep between the red and the white buoys laid-out. On his later depiction of Hunter's plan, Des Barres expanded the key to include an individual letter for each of the British ships in position that day, but the information is still the same. The hydrograpical information: soundings, sand-banks and the like are also identical.

Lieutenant John Hunter was part of a team of surveyors and hydrographers who worked closely together at this time under the British, charting the important rivers of the Middle States. These Middle States were extremely valuable to both the Colonial powers and to the invading British forces as they afforded such good access into the interior. Captain Andrew Snape Hammond summed the situation up extremely well when he wrote 'on account of the Navigable Rivers of this Country, there is no part of this Country, there is no part of the continent where ships can assist land operations more.' He was writing of the Chesapeake at the time but he might just as well have been writing of the Delaware. The principle was the same (see Heritage Charts A302).

Hammond had, himself, reconnoitered and surveyed the river between March and May of 1776 and had reported the state and position of rebel defences to Admiral Richard Howe and to his brother General William Howe before they set-out on their campaign in July 1776 to capture Philadelphia (see also Heritage Charts A205). As history would have it, General Howe's decision to turn British attention south, to capture Philadelphia after securing New York, rather than pushing North to join with General Burgoyne in Albany, ultimately proved fatal to the British campaign to retain their American colonies. Howe’s decision to attack Philadelphia by sea rather than to press through by land from New Jersey only served to take the pressure off Washington's retreating army, giving them a valuable month with which to regroup.